“Preach the Word” (2 Timothy 4:2).
Marshall Ramsey, editorial cartoonist for our Jackson, Mississippi Clarion-Ledger, told recently of his conversation with a colleague on another newspaper. They were lamenting the rapidly dwindling number of editorial cartoonists. Marshall said, “When I got into this profession, there were less than 200 full-time editorial cartoonists. I’m not sure what an accurate count is today, but I’ve heard it’s a couple dozen.”
As newspapers go the way of dinosaurs–my friends say we who still depend on them for our news are the real dinosaurs!–they keep cutting back on staff. Editorial cartoonists seem to have been some of the first to go.
Anyway, the two cartoonists were concerned over something that had just happened to a buddy on the staff of the Pittsburgh, PA Post-Gazette. He’d been fired because his cartoons were “too critical of the President of the United States,” according to his publisher.
Marshall notes, “Saying an editorial cartoonist is too critical of a politician is the worst reason to fire an editorial cartoonist ever. Critical editorial cartoons are as American as mom, apple pie, and Ben Franklin (he is credited with the first American one).”
So, how are things in Jackson between Marshall and the Clarion-Ledger, we wonder. In his 21 years here, he says, “I’ve never taken an idea from an editor (or anyone else). I have taken suggestions that might make the cartoon better or might make me realize I’ve done something really stupid. That’s how editors edit. The ideas are mine.”
His editors at the C-L, he says, do not want a cartoon they agreed with. “They wanted the best cartoon I could draw.” (see addendum)
Okay, fine. That started me thinking.